1,096 research outputs found
To fill or not to fill: a qualitative cross-country study on dentists' decisions in managing non-cavitated proximal caries lesions
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to identify barriers and enablers for dentists managing non-cavitated proximal caries lesions using non- or micro-invasive (NI/MI) approaches rather than invasive and restorative methods in New Zealand, Germany and the USA. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews were conducted, focusing on non-cavitated proximal caries lesions (radiographically confined to enamel or the outer dentine). Twelve dentists from New Zealand, 12 from Germany and 20 from the state of Michigan (USA) were interviewed. Convenience and snowball sampling were used for participant recruitment. A diverse sample of dentists was recruited. Interviews were conducted by telephone, using an interview schedule based on the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF). RESULTS: The following barriers to managing lesions non- or micro-invasively were identified: patients' lacking adherence to oral hygiene instructions or high-caries risk, financial pressures and a lack of reimbursement for NI/MI, unsupportive colleagues and practice leaders, not undertaking professional development and basing treatment on what had been learned during training, and a sense of anticipated regret (anxiety about not restoring a proximal lesion in its early stages before it progressed). The following enablers were identified: the professional belief that remineralisation can occur in early non-cavitated proximal lesions and that these lesions can be arrested, the understanding that placing restorations weakens the tooth and inflicts a cycle of re-restoration, having up-to-date information and supportive colleagues and work environments, working as part of a team of competent and skilled dental practitioners who perform NI/MI (such as cleaning or scaling), having the necessary resources, undertaking ongoing professional development and continued education, maintaining membership of professional groups and a sense of professional and personal satisfaction from working in the patient's best interest. Financial aspects were more commonly mentioned by the German and American participants, while continuing education was more of a focus for the New Zealand participants. CONCLUSIONS: Decisions on managing non-cavitated proximal lesions were influenced by numerous factors, some of which could be targeted by interventions for implementing evidence-based management strategies in practice
Photodynamics of potent antioxidants: ferulic and caffeic acids
The dynamics of ferulic acid (3-(4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenyl)-2-propenoic acid) and caffeic acid (3-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-2-propenoic acid) in acetonitrile, dioxane and water at pH 2.2 following photoexcitation to the first excited singlet state are reported. These hydroxycinnamic acids display both strong ultraviolet absorption and potent antioxidant activity, making them promising sunscreen components. Ferulic and caffeic acids have previously been shown to undergo transâcis photoisomerization via irradiation studies, yet time-resolved measurements were unable to observe formation of the cis-isomer. In the present study, we are able to observe the formation of the cis-isomer as well as provide timescales of relaxation following initial photoexcitation
Finite Size Scaling and ``perfect'' actions: the three dimensional Ising model
Using Finite-Size Scaling techniques, we numerically show that the first
irrelevant operator of the lattice theory in three dimensions
is (within errors) completely decoupled at . This interesting
result also holds in the Thermodynamical Limit, where the renormalized coupling
constant shows an extraordinary reduction of the scaling-corrections when
compared with the Ising model. It is argued that Finite-Size Scaling analysis
can be a competitive method for finding improved actions.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Finite size effects on measures of critical exponents in d=3 O(N) models
We study the critical properties of three-dimensional O(N) models, for
N=2,3,4. Parameterizing the leading corrections-to-scaling for the
exponent, we obtain a reliable infinite volume extrapolation, incompatible with
previous Monte Carlo values, but in agreement with -expansions. We
also measure the critical exponent related with the tensorial magnetization as
well as the exponents and critical couplings.Comment: 12 pages, 2 postscript figure
Formal change impact analyses for emulated control software
Processor emulators are a software tool for allowing legacy computer programs to be executed on a modern processor. In the past emulators have been used in trivial applications such as maintenance of video games. Now, however, processor emulation is being applied to safety-critical control systems, including military avionics. These applications demand utmost guarantees of correctness, but no verification techniques exist for proving that an emulated system preserves the original systemâs functional and timing properties. Here we show how this can be done by combining concepts previously used for reasoning about real-time program compilation, coupled with an understanding of the new and old software architectures. In particular, we show how both the old and new systems can be given a common semantics, thus allowing their behaviours to be compared directly
A New Deformation of W-Infinity and Applications to the Two-loop WZNW and Conformal Affine Toda Models
We construct a centerless W-infinity type of algebra in terms of a generator
of a centerless Virasoro algebra and an abelian spin-1 current. This algebra
conventionally emerges in the study of pseudo-differential operators on a
circle or alternatively within KP hierarchy with Watanabe's bracket.
Construction used here is based on a special deformation of the algebra
of area preserving diffeomorphisms of a 2-manifold. We show that
this deformation technique applies to the two-loop WZNW and conformal affine
Toda models, establishing henceforth invariance of these models.Comment: 8 page
On Two-Current Realization of KP Hierarchy
A simple description of the KP hierarchy and its multi-hamiltonian structure
is given in terms of two Bose currents. A deformation scheme connecting various
W-infinity algebras and relation between two fundamental nonlinear structures
are discussed. Properties of Fa\'a di Bruno polynomials are extensively
explored in this construction. Applications of our method are given for the
Conformal Affine Toda model, WZNW models and discrete KP approach to Toda
lattice chain.Comment: 28 pages, IFT-P/020/92-SAO-PAULO, Late
Casimir scaling of SU(3) static potentials
Potentials between static colour sources in eight different representations
are computed in four dimensional SU(3) gauge theory. The simulations have been
performed with the Wilson action on anisotropic lattices where the renormalised
anisotropies have been determined non-perturbatively. After an extrapolation to
the continuum limit we are able to exclude any violations of the Casimir
scaling hypothesis that exceed 5% for source separations of up to 1 fm.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, RevTeX, v2: 1 reference added, more explanation
about advantages of anisotrop
- âŠ